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Featured in Development

Alex Bradbury gives an overview of the status and development of RISC-V as it relates to modern operating systems, highlighting major research strands, controversies, and opportunities to get involved.

Featured in Architecture & Design

Will Jones talks about how Habito, the leading digital mortgage broker, benefited from using Haskell, some of the wins and trade-offs that have brought it to where it is today and where it's going next. He also talks about why functional programming is beneficial for large projects, and how it helps especially with migrating the data store.

Featured in AI, ML & Data Engineering

Katharine Jarmul discusses research related to fair-and-private ML algorithms and privacy-preserving models, showing that caring about privacy can help ensure a better model overall and support ethics.

Featured in Culture & Methods

This personal experience report shows that political in-house games and bad corporate culture are not only annoying and a waste of time, but also harm a lot of initiatives for improvement. Whenever we become aware of the blame game, we should address it! DevOps wants to deliver high quality. The willingness to make things better - products, processes, collaboration, and more - is vital.

Featured in DevOps

Service mesh architectures enable a control and observability loop. At the moment, service mesh implementations vary in regard to API and technology, and this shows no signs of slowing down. Building on top of volatile APIs can be hazardous. Here we suggest to use a simplified, workflow-friendly API to shield organization platform code from specific service-mesh implementation details.

ScrumBan - Evolution or Oxymoron?

Although not new, awareness of Kanban is now growing among users of Agile software methods. Talks, workshops and entire conferences are springing up, and Agile trainers are combining Kanban into their courses.. Practicing Agilists are investigating what this method, adapted from Lean, offers their teams: attractive benefits are cited, from making bottlenecks visible to making more progress faster and happier teams experiencing more "flow". Into this ecosystem, Simon Bennett's The Philosophy of Kanban is Kryptonite to Scrum offers a warning to those who are thinking of incorporating Kanban into their Scrum process. Proponents of Kanban agree with Bennet that Kanban's less agressive approach to impediments is at odds with Scrum's call to remove impediments immediately.

Bennett's blog post, which he declares as neither an anti-Kanban rant nor a "keep Scrum pure" diatribe, states that

If you’re going to use Scrum, but ignore or hide the impediments, (or even not raise them in the first place) then you are asking for a world of pain, and a lack of progress. This is what Ken Schwaber and Martin Fowler are talking about when they speak of flaccid Scrum. (at least from a technical debt perspective)

Both Scrum and Kanban prize transparency; but they handle it in different ways – and Scrum builds-in an explicit call to action, which needs to be answered for Scrum to succeed.

Kanban allows for you and your team to simply “accept” impediments, and measure their effect.

His position: their philosophies are at odds: your "Scrum project will weaken as long as the Kanban philosophy is nearby." However, applying a pure philosophy is not the goal: it's quality software, frequently delivered. To this end, he encourages practitioners to examine what kind of projects they have and how successful they are with Scrum, and he provides guidelines on how to choose which to use.

Corey Ladas' 2008 paper "Scrum-ban" described an evolutionary process toward Kanban which, if taken far enough, replaces most of Scrum. Ladas' approach would modify or even replace many of the traditional Scrum practices, such as the daily standup and burn-down charts. Interestingly, Anderson, whose Kanban experience report from Corbis made a splash at Agile2007, and who appears now to be largely focused on Kanban adoption, cites his original intent as not "converting people from Scrum" but rather helping those struggling to adopt Agile. Bennett's post suggests that teams carefully consider before incorporating Kanban: are they getting enough value from Scrum alone? He adds:: "if you really are dancing on the bleeding edge then I imagine you’ll come to depend on Scrum."

While Bennet isn't listed among the thought-leaders at Limited WIP Society (intended as "the home of kanban for software development community"), many of those listed have offered supportive comments on the blog's comment thread, including Karl Scotland and David J. Anderson. Anderson agreed:

Yes, Kanban is evolution while Scrum is revolution. I am very comfortable with that positioning.

Of course, any tool can be misused: Chris Sims' article Are Kanban Workflows Agile? reminds readers that if the kanban board is being used to make sure that each of the required activities has occurred, it is being used to enforce the team's definition of done, a job better suited to a simple checklist. And Mitch Lacey was recently overheard reminding us that at the "end of day there are no magic answers. Saying one solves people's problems over another is just that: fairy dust."

Scrum without the iterations

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One that is annoying about Scrum is its insistence on conformance: "If you can't do Scrum, you need to change!". Although correct in Scrum-theory, in the real world even Scrum needs to be fit to the current context. The Kanban method inspired me to replace some parts of Scrum with things that worked better for us.

A few things that Scrum enforces, but aren't always the optimal solution (in my experience):- The use of iterations- The use of story estimation - Synchronized release, demo and retrospective.

Bottom line is: Scrum is a valuable set of practices, but be prepared tune Scrum for your situation. Most Kanban initiatives show that you can change Scrum or even replacing it altogether to get better performance and transparency.

Re: Scrum without the iterations

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Actually, Scrum says nothing about story estimation, in fact nothing about "stories". Also, nothing in Scrum suggests you have to release at the same time you do a retrospective. So I guess you are not really dropping Scrum practices, except iterations... and I'd be wary of that. If you can find another way to hit a rhythm, and leverage the empirical process for feedback it's probably fine. Often when people (perhaps not you) drop iterations they are more likely to hide things than expose them. Thus, less learning.

Re: Scrum without the iterations

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In fact Scrum says nothing about backlog item estimation. It is simply a practice that some people find useful, like a visual task board.

It is probably important to assign to Scrum what should be assigned to Scrum, and nothing more or less. It leads to all kinds of confusion. All Scrum says is "get it done by the end of the agreed time period". Not a bad goal, I reckon.

Argh. Why does it have to be one -or- the other?

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It's so irritating to read the constant back-and-forth between the Scrum and Lean camps. Not to mention, passe. So two-thousand-and-late.

Scrum, Kanban, Lean, blah blah. What is important in each of these named-methodologies is not following them, but rather to learn the specific practices in each and apply them to your team as your team sees fit. I think the best part of retrospectives is that a team can look at the agile practices it has been using and change them, remove them, or add to them to see what works.

What usually ends up is not "pure" scrum/xp/lean/etc... but rather, a mix of useful practices as unique as the team members themselves.

I like what Henrik says above - "both are great tools. Mix and match." Exactly. And I look forward to hearing your talk at QCon! :)

Re: Kanban vs Scrum article

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Yes, and I respectfully disagree.

Everybody is entitled to their own opinion, but don't let other people make decisions for you. If some people advocate a revolutionary approach with Scrum that doesn't mean you have to. If some people see Scrum and Kanban as conflicting that doesn't mean you have to.

If whatever you do works in your context then it is right, call it what you will. Mix and match has worked well for me & my clients so far.

Re: Kanban vs Scrum article

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I think the problem here is that Scrum/XP et al are well established and its clear how they work. Kanban isn't as well established and so its less clear where the boundaries are. Henrik is making a success of mixing Scrum/Kanban while Simon Bennett raises some interesting concerns. As time goes on we will see if Simon's concerns manifest themselves and whether other's mimic Henrik's success. My point - its too early to be certain of anything.

Re: Argh. Why does it have to be one -or- the other?

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Great comment Michael, I agree with Henrik as well. We are far too focused on the label and discussing definitions as opposed to finding what is going to work for the team/organization to deliver value to the business.

My team sits at their standup. We work in iterations to help the business get predictability into releases. Another team I've worked with is trying to force Scrum into day-to-day production support and it ain't working. Kanban would suite them well.

Scrum, Kanban, Scrum-kan, ban-scrum, who gives a crap what you call it, as long as what you are doing works, the label you put on it doesn't matter.